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Greater Manchester Joint Commissioning Board...pathway, one ward on the Salford Royal site would...
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Greater Manchester Joint Commissioning Board 6
Date: 18 June 2019
Subject: Improving Specialist Care: Neuro-Rehabilitation Full Business Case
Report of: Steve Dixon, Chief Finance Officer and Deputy Chief Accountable Officer, Salford
Clinical Commissioning Group/ Commissioning Lead for Neuro-Rehabilitation
PURPOSE OF REPORT:
This report is categorised as relating to “Level A” business as set out in the JCB Terms of Reference – Section 10.
The purpose of this report is to present the Full Business Case for the acute neuro rehabilitation services in Greater Manchester. In addition, this report provides additional assurance that JCB requested on four main areas:
Equality impact assessments Travel impact assessment Community Neuro-Rehabilitation services in each locality Financial analysis
KEY ISSUES TO BE DISCUSSED:
The Board is invited to consider the content of the Full Business Case, as well as considering the additional assurance provided on the four specific points set out above.
In doing so, the Board is asked to note that legal advice has been taken on the process undertaken to date and that advice has confirmed that the process followed has been thorough and that there are no material risks from the process to date or in the recommendations.
Members’ attention is drawn to the fact that some elements of the proposal set out in the Full Business Case relate to elements of the specialised commissioning portfolio, (described as “Tier One” services), which have been delegated by the Board of NHS England to the Chief Officer of the GM Health and Social Care Partnership. Therefore, this proposal requires the support of both the Joint Commissioning Board and the Chief Officer of the Health and Social Care Partnership. The Chief Officer has been furnished with the same information for consideration as the JCB and will be invited to reach his decision at the same time as the JCB.
RECOMMENDATIONS:
The Greater Manchester Joint Commissioning Board is asked to:
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Note contents of report, in particular the additional assurance that JCB requested in
relation to equality impact assessments, travel impact assessment, community neuro
rehabilitation services and the financial impact
Agree the full business case for acute neuro rehabilitation services, specifically
approving the elements relating to CCG commissioned services and expenditure
CONTACT OFFICERS:
Steve Dixon, Commissioning Lead for Neuro-Rehab
mailto:[email protected]
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SYSTEM ENGAGEMENT
Please complete the information below to outline the discussion with sectoral governance groups prior to submitting to the GM Joint Commissioning Board. If it is not appropriate / deemed necessary for a discussion with a particular group please state why.
PRIMARY CARE ADVISORY GROUP (PCAG) Has the paper been discussed by PCAG? No PROVIDER FEDERATION BOARD (PFB) Has the paper been discussed by PFB? No WIDER LEADERSHIP TEAM (WLT) Has the paper been discussed by WLT? No STRATEGIC PARTNERSHIP EXECUTIVE BOARD (PEB) Has the paper been discussed by PEB? No GM CCG DIRECTORS OF COMMISSIONING (DOCS) Has the paper been discussed by DoCs? Yes Date of meeting: 14th May and 11th June 2019 Key points to be fed into JCB:
Comments included in Appendix 1 GM CCG CHIEF FINANCE OFFERS (CFOS) Has the paper been discussed by CFOs? Yes Date of meeting: 14th May and 11th June 2019 Key points to be fed into JCB:
Comments included in Appendix 1 GM LA HEADS OF COMMISSIONING (HOCS) Has the paper been discussed by HoCs? No If no please outline the reason: N/A
Note: There was more comprehensive system engagement on the Case for Change and Model of
Care prior to these being approved by JCB in October 2018. System engagement on this JCB report
and Full Business case has been limited to the commissioning groups (DoCs, CFOs, GMSCOG) and
key discussion captured within appendix 1
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1.0 INTRODUCTION AND BACKGROUND
1.1. Improving specialist Care Programme (ISCP) (formally Theme 3) has been set up to deliver
the strategy outlined in the Greater Manchester (GM) Health and Social Care Partnership
strategic plan ‘Taking Charge’; specifically, significant improvements to the quality, safety
and efficiency of the care patients receive when they need to be treated in hospital.
1.2. The transformation priorities for the programme were developed with clinicians, providers
and commissioners over several months culminating in a proposal from the Theme 3
Steering Group which was endorsed by CCGs, the Provider Federation Board, and the
Strategic Partnership Board Executive on the 19th September 2016. Acute Neuro-
Rehabilitation services were identified as one of these Transformation priorities.
1.3. The Acute Neuro Rehabilitation pathway underwent a standardised design and approval
process which consisted of:
Case for Change – Approved by the ISCP Board and Executive in August 2017.
Model of Care – The Model of Care was supported by the Clinical Reference Group in
January 2018 and the ISCP Board and Executive in April 2018.
1.4. The Greater Manchester Joint Commissioning Board (JCB) approved the model of care on
16th October 2018.
1.5. The model of care was presented to the Greater Manchester Joint Overview and Scrutiny
Committee (JOSC) to determine if any further conversations with patients and the public
were required. In November 2018, JOSC concluded that formal public consultation was not
required as involvement and engagement activities proportionate to the number of
patients affected by the proposed change had been undertaken during the design process.
1.6. The design process was submitted to NHS England (NHSE) to ensure that NHSE’s 5 stage
process had been adhered to in relation to proposed service change. NHSE confirmed the
design process met their requirements and the workstream could move into the next
phase.
1.7. In preparation of the production of the full Business Case, on 19th March 2019, JCB
approved the:
Criteria and Decision-Making Process in Selecting the single provider and approved the
single provider as the GM Neurosciences Centre (SRFT).
Site and bed-base configuration- maintaining acute neuro rehabilitation beds at the
existing four sites in GM.
Framework and level of detail required in the Full Business Case, which is presented
today.
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1.8. JCB specifically asked for the full business case and supplementary information to focus
and give assurance on:
The full financial impact of implementing the model of care
Equality Impact Assessment
Travel Impact assessment
Community Neuro-rehab services - whilst the business case relates to acute (hospital)
neuro rehabilitation, assurance is required that high quality community services are in
place
These areas are covered in sections 2 - 4 of this report.
2.0 FULL BUSINESS CASE
2.1. The Full Business Case is included as a separate report. This has been developed along the
green book 5 case model.
2.2. The estimated total spend for commissioners for the current acute inpatient neuro
rehabilitation pathway in Greater Manchester is £25m and the new model is expected to
cost around £24.1m. The total cash releasing financial saving is around £1.1m, being
around £0.9m on inpatient spend and a further £0.2m reduction in outpatients.
2.3. In addition, the new model is expected to reduce the continued year on year increase in
individual packages of care placed outside of GM. The number and cost of placements
made with Independent Sector providers has increased by over 30% in the past couple of
years. The new model of care, compared with the “do nothing” scenario would save an
additional £5.7m if the level of growth can be contained.
2.4. Comparing the new model of care against the “do nothing” scenario is a methodology
consistent with the modelling being undertaken on the other ISC programme. The total
savings of the new model compared with the “do nothing” scenario equate to around
£6.8m in total (cash releasing savings of £1.1m and containing future growth £5.7m)
2.5. The impact of provider costs has been completed and included in the full business case.
The NHS provider financial position has improved by circa £0.5m by implementing the new
model of care.
2.6. Assessment against the full list of the GM Finance and Estates Reference Group (FERG)
principles is included in the business case and were discussed at the GM Provider Directors
of Finance (DoF) meeting (6th June) and a joint DoF and CFO meeting on 11th June 2019.
These groups concluded that the FERG principles had been met in so far as the collective
GM providers’ financial position has not worsened (and in fact slightly improved) as a result
of introducing this model of care and that stranded costs had been minimised. Further
work is required during implementation to fully understand the financial impact on each
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individual provider organisation and how funding is moved around the system as a result of
implementing a single provider model. This is important to consider this detail not just for
the neuro rehabilitation model but for the wider Improving Specialist Care (ISC)
programme.
2.7. In relation to capital costs, the new model has been estimated to cost between £2m to
£3m. Whilst the existing sites across GM are being used for the neuro rehabilitation
pathway, one ward on the Salford Royal site would need to be re-purposed to
accommodate additional specialist patients (Prolonged Disorder of Consciousness (PDOC)
and Tracheostomy patients). It is acknowledged that there is no capital available at a
national or GM level. Therefore this is a local issue to be resolved in the Salford locality.
Salford Royal and Salford CCG have agreed to find a local solution to this.
2.8. The business case has been taken through a number of meetings across Greater
Manchester. A summary of the discussions and amendments made to the business case as
a result of this engagement process in included in Appendix 1.
3.0 COMMUNITY NEURO-REHAB SERVICES
3.1. Community neuro-rehabilitation services are vital to the sustainability of the whole of the
neuro-rehabilitation pathway including the new acute model of care. Both are integral
elements to working towards managing more people out of the hospital setting and
supporting self-management.
3.2. Significant work has already been completed in developing a standardised service
specification for community neuro rehabilitation services. This specification has been
approved. Commissioners in all 10 localities have started the process of commissioning
local services to deliver against the standards within the specification. There are currently
four localities in Greater Manchester that have commissioned services to the specification
(North Manchester, Stockport, Salford and Heywood, Middleton and Rochdale), two of
which (North Manchester and Stockport) are now delivering to the specification and the
other two are in implementation.
3.3. Each locality has been asked to provide an assurance statement on progress being made in
each locality on implementing the community neuro rehabilitation standards. The status
of community neuro rehabilitation services for each locality is outlined in Appendix 2.
3.4. In order for the full benefits of the acute neuro rehabilitation pathway to be realised, the
implementation of a community service in all 10 GM localities meeting the community
service specification and standards is required by April 2020.
3.5. All 10 localities are committed to implement the community pathway. However some risks
to implementing the community standards have been raised by some localities, in
particular timescales to recruit and potential lack of available workforce. This will be
monitored throughout the implementation phase.
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4.0 EQUALITY IMPACT ASSESSMENTS
4.1. Equality Impact Assessments (EIA) were undertaken for all ISCP workstreams by Equality
Diversity Development Services Ltd on behalf of the GMHSCP. This section provides a
summary of the issues and key considerations with regards to meeting the duties relating
to Public Sector Equality Duty (Section 149) outlined within the 2010 Equality Act.
4.2. The Equality Impact Assessment (EIA) considers the new neuro-rehab model of care and
the impact on patients and carers with protected characteristics accessing services. The
primary source of ‘consultation feedback’ was from ‘patient groups’. The EIA noted that an
outcome of the proposed change will be that care would be delivered closer to home.
Equality impacts to patients accessing the service would also be minimal.
4.3. The report made several recommendations related to equality implications:
The units continue to deliver high quality service and continue to place the patients
and key visitors at the heart of the patient’s recovery.
Units to review how they support key visitors to the patients by offering advice with
travel and Healthcare Travel Costs Scheme (HCTCS) and ensuring those pathways for
support are known to patients.
The units start to record how key visitors travel to see patients, noting in particular
public transport use and any difficulties with public transport
(Time/cost/delays/cancellation of key routes). After 12 months review of the data, if
the data shows that some visitors are having great difficulty, especially linked to
disability, then the unit and commissioners to consider how more immediate support
can be given (e.g. taxi service).
The unit to review its equality policy and how it supports different protected
characteristics and their needs, especially transgender patients. Link with key
community groups for their input and update policy and practice where necessary.
Link, as part of evidence gathering, with the Mayor of Manchester’s campaign to bring
all bus companies back in to one service provision.
4.4. These recommendations and any further equality needs and requirements of patients and
carers will be monitored during implementation and built into the benefits framework for
ongoing reporting. The full equality report can be found in Appendix 3.
5.0 TRAVEL IMPACT ASSESSMENT
5.1. The travel impact assessment has been completed and is included in the full equality
impact assessment (Appendix 3). Transport for Greater Manchester (TfGM) validated the
methodology and confirmed that the analysis was robust. The initial analysis for Neuro-
Rehab was presented to the JOSC on 14 November 2018.
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5.2. The key points of the travel analysis were:
As the new Model of Care does not propose current inpatients within the NHS in GM
will move to a different site – or that those currently receiving inpatient care in the
independent sector would move to a different site - it can be concluded that the
journey times would relate to new patients.
It can also be concluded that there will be reductions in journey times as a result of
implementing a new Model of Care which will provide the majority of hospital
inpatient care within Greater Manchester with only very occasional exceptions. The
new Model of Care will result in fewer patients placed outside of Greater Manchester.
5.3. To supplement the McKinsey travel analysis GM Healthwatch is going to undertake some
“lived experience” journeys. These public transport tests will be supported by TfGM.
6.0 ROLE OF THE LEAD COMMISSIONER
6.1. The lead commissioning role will differ during implementation to post-implementation.
During implementation the role will focus on oversight of the implementation via the
implementation steering group. They will also support development of the readiness
assessment as part of the benefits framework implementation to ensure the service is
ready to ‘go-live’.
6.2. Post implementation the role will be contracting focussed as outlined in the commercial
case within the business case. The role of the lead commissioner will be considered as part
of the review and recommendations within the GM Commissioning review paper and
linked to the role of the GM Joint Commissioning Team.
7.0 RECOMMENDATION
7.1. The Greater Manchester Joint Commissioning Board is asked to:
Note contents of report, in particular the additional assurance that JCB requested in
relation to equality impact assessments, travel impact assessment, community neuro
rehabilitation services and the financial impact
Agree the full business case for acute neuro rehabilitation services, specifically
approving the elements relating to CCG commissioned services and expenditure
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APPENDIX 1: FULL BUSINESS CASE DEVELOPMENT- ENGAGEMENT ACROSS GREATER MANCHESTER
Meeting Main Discussion Items Comments and/or
Amendments to Business
Case
14/5/2019: Joint Session: GM
CCG Directors of
Commissioning (DoCs) and
GM CCG Chief Finance
Officers (CFOs)
Wanted to see full equality impact and travel impact analysis- these have been shared.
Discussion on community services- each DoC agreed to provide a form of words from each locality on status.
Each locality confirm commitment to implementing the community service specification but queried
timeframe
Recognise some cash releasing savings and good to see the cost containment savings compared with “do
nothing”. Wanted to stress the non-financial benefits- ie the quality benefits within the model of care
Additional information
shared with DoCs. Quality
benefits highlighted in
business case. Updated
community information in
business case
29/5/2019 GM Specialist
Commissioning Oversight
Group (GMSCOG)
How confident that the bed modelling is correct? Any sensitivity analysis on length of stay reductions? How
do we get assurance that patient flow between Salford Royal site and other sites is working?
This will be picked up through implementation- and overseen and monitored by neuro rehab group
(commissioners and provider)
Updated implementation
governance section in
business case
5/6/2019: GM Manchester
Finance and Estates
Reference Group (FERG) and
GM Provider Directors of
Finance
Discussion on the economic case and whether the FERG principles have been met. Focus on whether the
recurrent revenue position under the new model is no worse than the current financial position.
Consideration of stranded costs, use of existing estates and capital. Concluded that the FERG principles had
been met but further work required during implementation to fully understand the financial impact on each
provider organisation and how funding is moved around the system. Follow up discussion between CFOs and
Dofs in June which will be taken forward in the wider ISC work programme.
Updated provider finance
section and FERG
principles. Added item on
implementation plan
6/6/209: Improved
Specialised Care Sub Group
The discussion focussed on the JCB report to ensure it provides assurance on the 4 areas raised during model
of care approvals process (equality impact assessment, travel assessment, community and finance).
Conclusion that the Full Business Case and JCB report includes all of the relevant information for JCB
All 3 groups recommend
approval of the Full
Business Case to JCB
11/6/2019: GM CCG DoCs Review of final business case and JCB paper
11/6/2019: GM CCG CFOs Review of final business case and JCB paper
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APPENDIX 2: COMMUNITY NEURO REHABILITATION SERVICES
Locality Status at June 2019
Anticipated
Completion of Service
Specification
Implementation
Bolton
Bolton locality is working collaboratively to meet the key elements of the GM service specification which includes
ensuring that the current waiting times are significantly reduced to the specification standards. Non recurrent funding
has been identified to support the service redesign required. The locality is working to the revised service being
operational from October 2019 but workforce to manage the current waiting list will be a challenge.
Oct-19
Bury
The CCG agreed a business case for additional investment in 2018-19 to develop an integrated stroke and neuro-
rehabilitation service. The Community Stroke service exists and is well regarded and its integration with a community
neuro-rehabilitation service will provide further resilience. It will be implemented in phases and mobilisation of Phase 1
will ensure compliance with the majority of the GM specification.
Aug-19
Heywood,
Middleton and
Rochdale
(HMR)
HMR CCG has invested additional funding to ensure that community neuro rehab provision meets the GM specification
and staffing structure. HMR CCG now has a Community neuro rehab (CNR) steering group that meets monthly to
ensure that the CNR team continues to meet the GM specification and that wait times for the service are managed
appropriately. The steering group has membership from HMR CCG planned care lead, BI, CNR team lead, clinical lead
and GM Neuro rehab network. The steering group recently held a productive workshop on the pathway. The workshop
was successful in identifying blockages in the service pathway and an action plan will be formed to take this forward.
Oct-19
North Manchester: Completed: Business as Usual Completed
Central and South Manchester: There is a designated commissioning lead in place for community neuro rehab and
stroke services. A strategic outline case (SOC) will be considered by Executive committee in June 2019, setting out
options and delivery costs in the context of the GM specification requirements. They are reviewing the north service
and may need to prioritise resources to ensure an operational city wide community neuro rehab service. The SOC will
be considered alongside other CCG priorities; the intention would be to progress to full business case in
October/November 2019. The intention is for the service to be operational from April 2020 although this is dependent
upon exploration and mitigation of a number of risks, including for example, recruitment and training of workforce,
relevant to population need. The intended GM acute services implementation date will need to align with provider
feasibility considerations in terms of community delivery, which may not be entirely ‘linear’ nor deliverable by April 2020,
and which remain to be explored.
Apr-20Manchester
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Locality Status at June 2019
Anticipated
Completion of Service
Specification
Implementation
Oldham
The CCG has made provision to develop existing service and will consider on receipt of a full business case. The CCG
has a meeting scheduled between commissioning and service leads to further discuss the investment options and
agree a final business case for submission to NHS Oldham CCG for review. To bring the service fully in line with the
service specification, the CCG estimates £700K is required recurrently. There is concern that recruitment to a fully
staffed service in a reasonable timescale is not realistic and a more phased, fluid solution is required that carefully
monitors improvements against outcomes.
Not known
Salford
Business Case Approved with additional funding into existing teams to increase staffing and meet the GM specification;
The CCG case was approved in June 2018 and the new team is almost established and operational. The CCG expects
a fully established service by the end of June 2019. The service will be compliant with the GM models for stroke and
community neuro rehabilitation.
Jul-19
Stockport Completed; at Business as Usual Completed
Tameside &
Glossop
The Tameside and Glossop model of care is closely aligned to the GM specification and meets all required standards.
The existing service can cope with the current and projected level of demand. The Strategic Commissioners and
Integrated Care Foundation Trust work closely together to monitor safety, activity levels and the effective flow of
patients.
Oct-19
Trafford
The CCG has confirmed MFT as the stability partner for community services. The CCG and MFT are working through a
process of due diligence which they are due to complete by October 2019. No formal decisions have been made in
respect of the new community neuro rehabilitation service as yet. The CCG is starting to undertake profiling for the
business case workforce modelling and it is the intention to develop the business case over the next couple of months.
The CCG is assessing what can put in place, working to the timescales that the GM specification requires. A gap
analysis against the specification has also been undertaken and referring to the compliance indicators from the ODN.
The CCG wants to be in a position to operate the service from October.
Oct-19
Wigan
The business case was presented to the Healthy Wigan Partnership Board for consideration and approval. The
recommendation to agree the business case and progress to immediate implementation was approved.
The service will be a joint community neuro rehabilitation / stroke service however it is the intention to adopt a phased
approach, starting with community neuro rehabilitation in the first instance to decrease waiting times.
Jan-20
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APPENDIX 3 – EQUALITY ANALYSIS REPORT
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IMPROVING SPECIALIST CARE PROGRAMME
ACUTE NEURO-REHABILITATION SERVICES:
FULL BUSINESS CASE
JUNE 2019
CONTACT OFFICERS:
Steve Dixon
Chief Finance Officer and Deputy Chief Accountable Officer
Salford CCG
Commissioning Lead for Neuro-Rehabilitation
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Document information
Document title: Acute Neuro-Rehabilitation Business Case
Owner: Steve Dixon (Lead Commissioner)
Author: NHS Transformation Unit
Version Editor Changes made Date
1.0 Matt Wright 1st draft 29th March 2019
2.0 Matt Wright Amended with comments 17th April 2019
3.0 Matt Wright Amended with comments 29th April 2019
4.0 Matt Wright Amended with Financial information added and NHSE comments
2nd May 2019
5.0 Matt Wright Additional financial information, formatting and contents page updated
7th May 2019
6.0 Steve Dixon Proof read, minor amendments, clarification on governance and amended Economic case narrative
8th May 2019
7.0 Matt Wright Updated with amendments 8th May 2019
8.0 Steve Dixon Updated the latest community neuro rehabilitation information and completion of the provider costs section.
6th June 2019
9.0 Steve Dixon Final Draft 11th June 2019
mailto:[email protected]
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CONTENTS
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY…………………………………………………………………………………………………………………6
INTRODUCTION ......................................................................................................................... 6
1. STRATEGIC CASE ..................................................................................................................... 7
1.1 INTRODUCTION ............................................................................................................................... 7
1.2 BACKGROUND ................................................................................................................................. 8
1.3 CASE FOR CHANGE ........................................................................................................................ 10
1.4 CURRENT MODEL OF CARE ........................................................................................................... 11
1.5 FUTURE MODEL OF CARE ............................................................................................................. 13
1.6 BENEFITS AND RISKS ..................................................................................................................... 15
1.7 CONSTRAINTS AND DEPENDENCIES ............................................................................................. 16
1.8 MODEL OF CARE ASSURANCE PROCESS ....................................................................................... 17
1.9 SINGLE PROVIDER ......................................................................................................................... 19
2. ECONOMIC CASE .................................................................................................................. 20
2.1 INTRODUCTION ............................................................................................................................. 20
2.2 MODEL OF CARE COMPONENTS ................................................................................................... 21
2.3 MODEL OF CARE: OPTIONS APPRAISAL ...................................................................................... 220
2.4 PREFFERED OPTION…………………………………………………………………………………………………………………24
2.5 CRITICAL SUCCESS FACTORS ......................................................................................................... 25
2.6 COSTS ............................................................................................................................................ 26
2.7 RISKS ............................................................................................................................................. 26
2.8 BENEFITS ....................................................................................................................................... 27
2.9 SENSITIVITY ANALYSIS ................................................................................................................... 28
3. FINANCIAL CASE ................................................................................................................... 29
3.1 INTRODUCTION……………………………………………………………………………………………………………………….28
3.2 FINANCIAL MODELLING FOR COMMISSIONERS .......................................................................... 29
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3.3 SENSITIVITY ANALYSIS FOR COMMISSIONERS………………………………………………………………………….31
3.4 PROVIDER FINANCIAL MODEL ...................................................................................................... 34
3.5 NON-RECURRENT FINANCIAL COSTS ............................................................................................ 35
3.6 CAPITAL REQUIREMENTS .............................................................................................................. 35
3.7 GM FINANCE AND ESTATES REFERENCE GROUP (FERG) AGREED PRINCIPLES ............................ 36
4. COMMERCIAL CASE .............................................................................................................. 37
4.1 INTRODUCTION ............................................................................................................................. 37
4.2 PROCUREMENT STRATEGY ........................................................................................................... 37
4.3 CHARGING MECHANISMS ............................................................................................................. 38
4.4 CONTRACTUAL ISSUES .................................................................................................................. 38
4.5 PERSONNEL IMPLICATIONS .......................................................................................................... 38
5. MANAGEMENT CASE ............................................................................................................ 39
5.1 INTRODUCTION ............................................................................................................................. 39
5.2 PROGRAMME GOVERNANCE AND MANAGEMENT ...................................................................... 39
5.3 PROGRAMME PLAN ...................................................................................................................... 42
5.4 BENEFITS FRAMEWORK AND MANAGEMENT .............................................................................. 43
5.5 POST PROJECT EVALUATION ......................................................................................................... 44
5.6 CHANGE MANAGEMENT AND COMMUNICATIONS ..................................................................... 44
5.7 INTERDEPENDENCIES .................................................................................................................... 44
5.8 RISK MANAGEMENT ..................................................................................................................... 45
TABLES
Table 1 Post-acute Neuro-Rehabilitation Services ............................................................................... 9
Table 2 Model of care assurance process ........................................................................................... 18
Table 3 Model of care components .................................................................................................... 22
Table 4 Options Appraisal ................................................................................................................... 25
Table 5 Key Risks ............................................................................................................................... 265
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Table 6 Benefits, Impacts and Financial Benefits ............................................................................... 28
Table 7 Estimated GM Neuro Rehab Acute Inpatient Spend 2019/20 for Commissioners ................ 29
Table 8 Estimated Recurrent Cost of Proposed Model of Care for Acute Inpatient Services ............ 30
Table 9 Overall Estimated Cost Impact of New Model by Stage and Year for Commissioners .......... 31
Table 10 Overall Estimated Recurrent Cost Impact of New Model by Commissioners using 2 different
methodologies. ................................................................................................................................... 32
Table 11 Estimated Do Nothing Scenario ........................................................................................... 33
Table 12 Estimated Worst Case Scenario ........................................................................................... 33
Table 13 Estimated Scenarios ............................................................................................................. 34
Table 14 Description of key groups and boards ................................................................................. 41
Table 15 Programme plan ................................................................................................................... 42
Table 16 Summary of the benefits framework plan for the reporting and governance process ....... 43
Table 17 Interdependencies ............................................................................................................... 45
FIGURES
Figure 1 Current model of Neuro-Rehabilitation services in GM ....................................................... 12
Figure 2 Future model of care ............................................................................................................ 14
Figure 3 Key Benefits of the Model of Care ........................................................................................ 27
Figure 4 Governance Structure ........................................................................................................... 40
APPENDICES (INCLUDED AS ATTACHMENTS)
Appendix 1 Neuro-Rehabilitation Model of Care
Appendix 2 Community Neuro-Rehabilitation Service Development Status
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EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
The improving specialist care programme (ISCP) has enabled the transformation of acute neuro-
rehabilitation to move forward. For over a decade the Neuro-Rehabilitation service has experienced
significant difficulties with patient flow and consistency of provision across Greater Manchester.
Following a standardised design and approval process the clinical case for change and co-produced
model of care have been developed and were approved by the ISCP Board and Executive in April
2018. The new model of care alongside the GM Neurosciences Centre at Salford Royal NHS
Foundation Trust (SRFT) as the single provider will help reduce variation of service delivery across
Greater Manchester and reduce the requirement for independent sector beds by providing more
care within the NHS service.
The estimated recurrent cost impact of the new model to commissioners excluding any non-
recurrent costs such as capital or transitional support would be around £1.1m cash releasing savings
for commissioners and a further £5.3m savings relating to avoiding future growth. The NHS provider
financial position improves by around £0.5m as a result of implementing the new model of care.
Benefits of the new model will be tracked using a robust benefits framework which not only
measures ‘readiness to go-live’ but also onward tracking of aligned clinical standards.
A formal governance structure will be developed to oversee implementation. Once implemented,
this will be further developed to ensure consistency of service across the whole neuro-rehab
pathway including community services.
INTRODUCTION
Neuro-Rehabilitation is a complex medical process which aims to aid patients recover from an illness,
long-term condition or injury to the nervous system and to minimise and/or compensate for any
functional alterations resulting from it.
Of the admissions in Greater Manchester in our hospital settings where Neuro-Rehabilitation is
provided, typically around 50-60% have an acquired brain injury, 10-15% have damage to their spinal
cord and peripheral nervous system and 10-15% might have conditions such as Multiple Sclerosis.
Neuro-Rehabilitation offers patients a series of therapies from the psychological to occupational,
teaching or re-training patients on mobility skills, communication processes, and other aspects of
that person's daily routine. It can also include a focus on nutrition, psychological and creative parts
of a person's recovery.
Neuro-Rehabilitation services within Greater Manchester provide rehabilitation for patients with
neurological illness, injury or long-term condition in the hyper-acute, acute, post-acute, slow stream
or community setting. Hyper Acute and Acute Neuro-Rehabilitation services are currently provided
as part of the Manchester Centre for Clinical Neurosciences; they are co-located with the Major
Trauma Centre at Salford Royal NHS Foundation Trust (SRFT) and are commissioned by NHS England
Specialist Commissioners. Post-Acute Neuro-Rehabilitation Services are provided by three NHS
Trusts and commissioned by Clinical Commissioning Groups (CCGs).
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Each of the NHS inpatient services are managed by a different Trust and commissioned separately.
Outcomes such as length of stay and time from referral to admission vary between the services; as
do practices such as admission and discharge planning.
Due to national recommendations developed since 2013 for managing/assessing neurological
patients with Prolonged Disorders of Consciousness (PDoC) and/or tracheostomy in minimum
cohorts to ensure appropriate expert care, such patients who require post-acute inpatient
rehabilitation are not managed in the three post-acute units. Because of the complex needs of these
patients, clinicians managing them must have appropriate specialist skills and the infrastructure to
support safe patient care. Consequently, in GM patients, with PDoC and/or tracheostomy who
require post-acute rehabilitation are directed towards independent sector placements that are often
outside of Greater Manchester and remain in acute Neuro-Rehabilitation beds whilst the process to
agree and find a placement is completed. In addition, these low volume/complex placements are
monitored by commissioning organisations who may not have access to the relevant expertise and
rely solely on the assessments and advice supplied by the providers. For these reasons patients often
remain in independent sector beds for many months longer than clinically required.
Patient flow is inadequate, inequitable and disjointed across the system. There is a lack of
appropriate and timely access to beds and to community services with uncoordinated access to care
at all levels.
There is poor access to post-acute Neuro-Rehabilitation. There is no directly commissioned NHS
service for slow-stream rehabilitation or medically stable Neuro-Rehabilitation patients who display
severe challenging behaviour (SCB) and require post-acute services. Instead individual funding
requests are submitted and considered by CCGs and ad hoc placements arranged both within and
outside of GM, mainly within the independent sector. GM CCGs spend approximately £6.2 million
per year (2018/19) on slow-stream rehabilitation placements, contracting with multiple different
providers. The number of placements and the costs of Independent Sector placements have
increased considerably over the past couple of years. Frequency of reviews of patients within these
placements varies between CCGs and anecdotally, commissioners have expressed concern about
patients spending too long in independent sector placements and whether they have the expertise
in Neuro-Rehabilitation to review placements.
This business case details the case for change for the existing service, how the new model of care
will improve delivery of care, the financial implications and benefits for the new service and how the
service transformation will be managed.
1. STRATEGIC CASE
1.1 INTRODUCTION
The strategic case describes the current model of care and the case for change for service
transformation. It describes the model of care and how it has been co-produced with clinicians and
patients. It outlines the proposed benefits to implementing the new model of care and the risks and
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8
constraints to implementation. It also highlights the robust governance process that the new model
of care has been taken through before business case development.
1.2 BACKGROUND
For over a decade the Neuro-Rehabilitation service has experienced significant difficulties with
patient flow and consistency of provision across Greater Manchester. Service change is required in
order to achieve optimal patient outcomes.
In 2013 commissioners invested in an additional 20 beds to improve flow (10 additional level 1 beds
and 10 additional level 2 beds) to bring the Greater Manchester inpatient NHS service to 117 beds.
The intention, at that time, was for the provision of community Neuro-Rehabilitation services to be
considered as a second phase after the introduction of the additional beds. In 2016 a Greater
Manchester service specification for community Neuro-Rehabilitation was developed in
collaboration with clinicians and commissioners; however to date only two of the ten localities in GM
have implemented a service as per the service specification. Greater Manchester has the highest
number of Neuro-Rehabilitation beds per head of population than anywhere else in the UK.
In 2015 an Operational Delivery Network (ODN) was established to identify and address issues and
improve patient flow. Since 2015 the ODN has been advocating whole-system service transformation
due to the issues described herein and on the basis that improved efficiency and improved service
provision will reduce the need for the current number of beds.
Hyper Acute and Acute Neuro-Rehabilitation Services are co-located with the Neurosciences Centre
and Major Trauma Centre and provided by Salford Royal NHS Foundation Trust (SRFT). This
specialised service is comprised of 30 beds (20 hyper-acute and 10 acute) and is commissioned by
NHSE to a value of £5.8 million p.a. The hyper-acute beds attract a bed day tariff, whilst the 10 acute
beds are funded through a block contract.
Post-acute Neuro-Rehabilitation Services are provided by three NHS Trusts and commissioned by
several clinical commissioning groups as described in the table below:
Provider Service Name Number of Beds GM CCG Annual
Spend
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Table 1 Post-acute Neuro-Rehabilitation Services
Each of the NHS inpatient services are managed by a different trust and commissioned separately,
with no consistency of tariffs. Outcomes such as length of stay, time from referral to admission etc.
vary between the services; as do practises such as admission and discharge planning.
Due to national recommendations for managing/assessing neurological patients with prolonged
disorder of consciousness and/or tracheostomy in minimum cohorts, patients who require post-
acute rehabilitation inpatient services cannot be managed in the three post-acute units. Instead, the
patients are usually directed towards independent sector placements and remain in acute Neuro-
Rehabilitation beds whilst the process to agree and find a placement is completed. In addition, these
low volume/complex placements are monitored by commissioning organisations who may not have
access to the relevant expertise and rely solely on the assessments and advice supplied by the
providers. Patients can remain in independent sector beds for many months longer than clinically
required.
There are no routinely commissioned NHS slow-stream Neuro-Rehabilitation services in Greater
Manchester, or any routinely commissioned post-acute services for people with severe challenging
behaviour. Instead, individual funding requests are made and placements arranged on an ad hoc
basis with multiple different providers, both within and out-with Greater Manchester. The GM CCG
spend on slow-stream Neuro-Rehabilitation placements has grown in the last 2 years from c. £4.5
million per annum to c. £6.15 million per annum in 2018-19. The spend on post-acute services for
people with severe challenging behaviour is unknown, however all people are placed outside of
Greater Manchester due to the lack of specialist facilities within the region.
Manchester
Foundation Trust
Trafford Intermediate Neuro-
Rehabilitation Unit (INRU) 30
£13.0 million
Pennine Acute Trust Floyd Unit 18
Stockport NHS
Foundation Trust
Devonshire Centre 19
Manchester
Foundation Trust
Taylor Unit at Trafford
General
20 (currently only
10 open)
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1.3 CASE FOR CHANGE
The case for change and model of care were developed through the Improving Specialist Care
Programme (Theme 3) Governance process in April 2018 and approved by GM Joint Commissioning
Board (JCB) in October 2018. The model of care is included as appendix 1.
The key drivers for change in the inpatient Neuro-Rehabilitation are:
Patient flow is inadequate, inequitable and disjointed across the system. There is a lack of
appropriate and timely access to beds and to community services with uncoordinated access
to care at all levels. Admission and discharge criteria for all levels of neurological
rehabilitation require strengthening to minimise blockages and to overcome barriers to
appropriate care, to ensure patients are in the right setting for their rehabilitation need.
Blockages in Neuro-Rehabilitation beds alone amount to c. 9000 lost bed days and c. £3
million per annum. In addition, people spend c. 8000 bed days in other GM NHS beds (i.e. in
District General Hospital (DGHs)) per annum, waiting for a GM Neuro-Rehabilitation bed.
Appropriately resourced services need to be commissioned to meet demand and avoid the
current waste in the system. Furthermore, delayed outflow from the Neurosciences Centre
leads to difficulties in accepting urgent and emergency transfers into Neurosurgery in a
timely manner, introducing a significant clinical risk.
Inadequate care and flow for tracheostomy (due to neurological deficits) and PDoC
patients because the current post-acute Neuro-Rehabilitation services are not able to meet
national standards for both tracheostomy and PDoC patients. Those patients requiring
ongoing rehabilitation after medical stabilisation can wait for prolonged periods of time in
acute beds waiting for a commissioning decision and independent sector placement.
Poor access to post-acute Neuro-Rehabilitation. There is no directly commissioned service
for slow-stream rehabilitation or medically stable Neuro-Rehabilitation patients who display
SCB and require post-acute services. Instead individual funding requests are submitted and
considered by CCGs and ad hoc placements arranged both within and outside of GM, mainly
within the independent sector. GM CCGs spend approximately £4.5 million per year on slow-
stream rehabilitation placements, contracting with multiple different providers. Frequency
of reviews of patients within these placements varies between CCGs. Anecdotally,
commissioners have expressed concern about patients spending too long in independent
sector placements and whether they have the expertise in Neuro-Rehabilitation to review
placements.
Post Acute services vary, including waiting times to access the services, practices within
services including admission and discharge planning, staffing levels, outcomes, key
performance indicators e.g. average length of stay varies between post-acute services (88
days – 156 days).
Community services vary and this creates unacceptable inequalities in access to care. The
impact of inadequate community Neuro-Rehabilitation services includes longer lengths of
stay for some inpatients, people are admitted to inpatient services inappropriately, sub
optimal patient outcomes and, in some cases, failure to reach individual potential and poor
patient experience.
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Tariff varies between inpatient services both within GM and with neighbouring services.
Within GM, the post-acute Neuro-Rehabilitation service bed day rates vary from £385 to
£426 per day. Level 1 are high cost / low volume services, which provide for patients with
highly complex rehabilitation needs that are beyond the scope of their local and district
specialist services. These are normally provided in co-ordinated service networks planned
over a regional population of 1-5 million through specialised commissioning arrangements.
These services are sub-divided into: Level 1a - for patients with high physical dependency
and Level 1b - mixed dependency. The tariff for the level 1a service in GM is £487,
significantly lower than the equivalent service in Cheshire & Merseyside which has a bed day
rate of £550. The level 1b service in GM is funded to a higher level (£587) than the equivalent
level 1b service in Cheshire & Merseyside (£550). The current tariff in GM does not enable
the service to operate with sufficient staff and is one of the primary root causes of the service
difficulties.
Significant variation in investment in Community Neuro-Rehabilitation services between
different regions of GM. The low levels or lack of investment in community Neuro-
Rehabilitation services does not allow the service to operate with sufficient staff and is one
of the primary root causes of the service difficulties described earlier.
Demand for Neuro-Rehabilitation services has increased and is expected to increase
further in the future. The existing service cannot meet current demand. With advances in
acute medical/surgical care, increasing numbers of patients are surviving events that they
would have unfortunately died from in the past. Patients are also surviving with more
complex rehabilitation and care needs. In addition, the population continues to grow and
people are generally living longer.
Staffing levels fall significantly short of national and/or local recommendations. This is
primarily because of insufficient investment in both inpatient and community services and
results in variation between services, longer lengths of stay, sub-standard patient outcomes
and experience and ultimately greater reliance and dependency of patients on other services
e.g. GPs, health & social services packages of care, avoidable hospital admissions etc.
1.4 CURRENT MODEL OF CARE
Neuro-Rehabilitation services provide rehabilitation for patients with neurological illness, injury or
long-term condition in the hyper-acute, acute, post-acute, slow stream or community setting.
Hyper Acute and Acute Neuro-Rehabilitation Services are currently provided as part of the GM
Neurosciences Centre and co-located Major Trauma Centre at SRFT.
Post-Acute Neuro-Rehabilitation Services are provided by three NHS Trusts and commissioned by
Clinical Commissioning Groups (CCGs).
Each of the NHS inpatient services are managed by a different Trust and commissioned separately.
Outcomes such as length of stay, time from referral to admission etc. vary between the services; as
do practices such as admission and discharge planning.
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PDoC and Tracheostomy Patients
Due to national recommendations developed since 2013 for managing/assessing neurological
patients with PDoC and/or tracheostomy in minimum cohorts to ensure appropriate expert care,
such patients who require post-acute inpatient rehabilitation are not managed in the four post-acute
units. Because of the complex needs of these patients, clinicians managing them must have
appropriate specialist skills and the infrastructure to support safe patient care.
Consequently, in GM patients with PDoC and/or tracheostomy who require post-acute rehabilitation
are directed towards independent sector placements and remain in acute Neuro-Rehabilitation beds
whilst the process to agree and find a placement is completed. In addition, these low
volume/complex placements are monitored by commissioning organisations who may not have
access to the relevant expertise and rely solely on the assessments and advice supplied by the
providers. For these reasons patients often remain in independent sector beds for many months
longer than clinically required.
As detailed within the Acute Neuro-Rehabilitation Case for Change, commissioners have agreed to
the non-recurrent funding of a complex discharge team to provide the bridge between acute and
community services, which will contribute to the Model of Care.
Figure 1 Current model of Neuro-Rehabilitation services in GM
Other Independent Sector Provision
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There are no routinely commissioned slow stream Neuro-Rehabilitation services in GM, or any
routinely commissioned post-acute services for people with Severe Challenging Behaviour (SCB);
instead, individual funding requests are made and placements arranged on an ad hoc basis with
multiple providers, both within and out-with GM.
The GM CCGs currently spend c. £6.2 million per annum (2018/19) on slow-stream Neuro-
Rehabilitation placements. The number of placements and costs are increasing year on year with the
equivalent spend in 2016/17 being £4.5 million. The spend on post-acute services for people with
SCB is currently unquantified. However, all people are placed outside of GM due to the lack of
specialist facilities within the region. Due to a of lack of expertise of commissioners in the long term
management of these complex patients, alongside absence of pro-active clinical monitoring of
placements, it is not known what proportion of patients remain in costly inpatient settings for longer
than is clinically required, contributing to a delayed patient recovery.
NHS Community Services
Significant work has already been completed in developing a standardised service specification for
community neuro rehabilitation services and commissioners have started the process of
commissioning/delivery of that service specification; there are currently four areas that have
commissioned services to the specification (North Manchester, Stockport, Salford and Heywood,
Middleton and Rochdale), two of which (North Manchester and Stockport) are now delivering to the
specification and the other two are in implementation. The current status of community services was
confirmed at GM Directors of Commissioning (DoCs) meeting in May 2019 and the assurance of each
locality’s commitment to the community specification is contained in appendix 2.
The mobilisation of community services in all localities that meet the service specification will
commence by October 2019 with full mobilisation by April 2020. Full mobilisation will be required
for the implementation of the acute model of care and full realisation of anticipated benefits.
1.5 FUTURE MODEL OF CARE
The model of care was collaboratively designed and developed following a standard design process.
The model was approved by JCB in October 2018.
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Figure 2 Future model of care
The key features of the Model of Care are:
A single provider of the bed based (inpatient) GM Neuro-Rehabilitation service to:
o Establish a single point of access to inpatient services coupled with the complex
discharge service, to implement clear admission criteria and proactively manage
discharges.
o Support patients to be cared for closer to home, by reducing time spent in a hyper-
acute environment.
o Improve compliance with clinical standards and eliminate the variation.
o Improve recruitment and retention of staff - there will be greater carer progression
opportunities and improved service resilience.
As now, up to 30 hyper-acute and acute Neuro-Rehabilitation beds on the hot site.
In addition, up to 10 beds for the management of patients with tracheostomy and/or PDoC
on the hot site (as an alternative to beds in the independent sector).
Post-acute site/s delivering up to a total of 60 beds (27 fewer beds than the current model)
with the potential to reduce bed numbers further over time.
Circa 20 new beds for patients requiring slow stream Neuro-Rehabilitation, creating new
beds closer to home for the benefits of patients.
Community Neuro-Rehabilitation services in every locality area providing patients with a
consistent service offer, regardless of postcode.
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Consistent oversight, commissioning and review of all patients in ad hoc placements in the
independent sector.
Robust and consistent pathways for patients in transition from children to adult services
within Neuro-Rehabilitation.
1.6 BENEFITS AND RISKS
Benefits of the New Model of Care:
The perceived benefits outlined in the Model of Care are as follows:
Reorganisation of Post-Acute Sites and beds
NHS sites remaining the same
Increase in NHS bed provision
Reduction in Independent Sector (IS) beds
This will lead to more streamlined, equitable and standardised services with opportunities for collaborative working and shared learning opportunities
Improving staffing levels to create a sustainable workforce and maintenance of competencies
The Model of Care and new tariff structure will enable staffing to be increased to British Society of Rehabilitation Medicine (BSRM) standards.
Within the Model of Care, it is expected that consistent staff competencies across the inpatient and community services will be developed to improve the quality and consistency of the service and to improve patient outcomes, thereby eliminating the current variations.
Elimination of variation in service quality, patient outcomes and involvement in Research and
Development (R&D)
The Case for Change highlighted that there is significant variation in service quality, patient outcomes and indeed there is no co-ordinated access to R&D in the current Neuro-Rehabilitation service. Transforming the Neuro-Rehabilitation service in GM will create a single service, with a standardised approach to assessment, access and discharge, and provide the opportunity for a consistent approach to R&D, under the leadership of one R&D lead for the service. Services being commissioned by a single commissioning organisation will support further elimination of variation.
Consistent, high quality patient experience
The Case for Change highlighted that patient experience in GM is often poor. Feedback received to date focussed on the following themes:
Timeliness of access to every part of the service
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Lack of services or specialists in some areas of GM
Intensity of therapy
Communication
The new Neuro-Rehabilitation single service will ensure equity of specialist services across GM, with standardised access to high quality care and treatment across the whole pathway of care.
Cost effective service delivery
The single service will be paid for under a consistent tariff basis as recommended nationally and in line with other English regions. Delivery of the inpatient service by a single provider will enable economies of scale and sharing of scare resources across the service and sites.
Future-proofed services
It is vital that the recommended Model of Care in GM is future-proofed and able to deliver benefits to patients over the long-term. Anticipated future demand changes have also been factored in to the bed numbers so that the GM Single service model will remain fit for purpose.
Main Risks of the New Model of Care:
Delivering the overall reduction of beds as described in the inpatient part of the model
of care is dependent upon the transformation of community Neuro-Rehabilitation services
in every area of Greater Manchester.
Availability of workforce to recruit to new posts.
Timescale to implement full model and the associated transformation costs incurred during
phasing.
1.7 CONSTRAINTS AND DEPENDENCIES
Constraints
The pathway implementation will be subject to the following constraints:
Patient safety is paramount and must be maintained throughout the transitional period and
by the new models of service.
Services must have robust arrangements in place to ensure that any delivery is safe and has
a high quality.
Implementation will need to be on a phased basis across Greater Manchester.
Ability to adequately recruit to vacancies.
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Cross organisational collaboration (e.g. integrated commissioning across CCG and
specialised commissioners).
Commissioning financial constraints.
Dependencies
The successful delivery of an implementation plan will be dependent on:
Community service provision across GM that consistently delivers and is capable of
sustaining flow across the system prior to reducing bed stock
Community services being capable of timely assessment and discharge of patients
Service access agreements in place with host sites for INRU beds
Successful commissioning arrangements established across all cohorts of Neuro-
Rehabilitation patients across GM.
SLAs with provider organisations in place.
Clear understanding of current workforce arrangements across providers.
Funding available for one-off set up costs for example estate costs and equipment costs.
1.8 MODEL OF CARE ASSURANCE PROCESS
The Model of Care (accompanied by the quality standards and co-dependency framework) was
independently reviewed by an External Clinical Assurance Panel (ECAP) and feedback from
this process contributed towards the final Model of Care recommendation in 2017.
ECAP confirmed that models for hyper acute and acute services would work from the perspective of
clinical effectiveness and safety, supporting the model for co-located services.
The panel specifically noted:
That the Case for Change was compelling and identified the appropriate drivers for change.
That the appropriate clinical standards had been identified.
That a good assessment of clinical interdependencies had been made.
This Model of Care was sound with varying degrees of risks and benefits depending on the
number of sites included in each model.
Panel members stated that this was the most extensive assessment of Neuro-Rehabilitation Services that they had seen, for which GM should be applauded.
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The Model of Care was endorsed by the Clinical Reference Group in January 2018 and recommended
by the ISCP (Theme 3) Board and Executive in April 2018.
The GM Joint Commissioning Board (GMJCB) approved the model of care and its recommendations
on 16th October 2018. The GMJCB also recommended to the GM Joints Overview and Scrutiny
Committee (JOSC) that formal public consultation was not required, as involvement and engagement
activities proportionate to the number of patients affected by the proposed change, had been
undertaken during the design process.
Table 2 Model of care assurance process
The design process was confirmed as meeting the NHSE 5 stage process and subsequently the JOSC
reviewed the Model of Care in November 2018 and agreed that formal public consultation was not
required.
On 19th March 2019 the GMJCB approved the recommendations of single provider and business case
framework. At this meeting they also requested additional information regarding:
Travel analysis
Equality Impact Assessment
Each locality’s progress on implementing the community neuro-rehab services
This information will be provided through an overarching paper to be presented at the GMJCB
meeting on 18th June 2019 alongside the business case.
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1.9 SINGLE PROVIDER
The approved Case for Change and Model of Care recommended that the bed-based service (hyper-acute, acute, PDOC/tracheostomy, post-acute and slow stream services) would be managed as a single service by a single provider in order to integrate the whole pathway. The single service would be underpinned by:
Single clinical leadership and governance arrangements.
Combined medical and senior nursing workforce.
Common standards, guidelines and protocols.
A single research strategy (Clinical Trials).
Combined training and education arrangements.
With a single performance management framework.
The decision-making process to recommend the single provider was based upon the following:
Existing GM provider of Neuro-Rehab acute services.
Knowledge and expertise in managing Neuro-Rehabilitation patients on acute Neuroscience
and Major Trauma pathways.
Co-located with the GM Neurosciences Centre.
The recommendation to the GM Joint Commissioning Board was that the GM Neurosciences Centre
(Salford Royal NHS Foundation Trust) be commissioned as the single provider for the bed-based
Neuro-Rehabilitation services (hyper-acute, acute, PDOC/tracheostomy, post-acute and slow stream
services) across Greater Manchester.
Salford Royal NHS Foundation Trust is an existing provider of GM Neuro-Rehabilitation Services and
has the experience and expertise of managing patients within existing pathways. SRFT is also
collocated with the Neurosciences centre outlined above as a key requirement of the single provider.
The GM Provider Federation Board also confirmed support for the following recommendations at its
meeting on 8th March:
Establish a single GM provider for acute and post-acute Neuro-Rehabilitation inpatient
services.
Supported, subject to due process, the designation of the GM Neurosciences Centre (Salford
Royal NHS Foundation Trust) as the single service provider for GM, on that basis that given
the proposed Model of Care and the consequent detailed commissioning specification that
will be issued by GM commissioners (including Specialist Commissioners) Salford Royal will
be the only provider capable of responding to the detailed clinical requirements.
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The recommendation of the single provider and the decision-making process was approved by
GMJCB at its meeting on 19th March 2019.
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2. ECONOMIC CASE
2.1 INTRODUCTION
The economic case describes the agreed key model of care components and how this was utilised to
undergo a high-level options appraisal undertaken by the programme team and patient and carer
group. The single provider has taken this work to refine the available options and outline a preferred
option. This case also outlines the critical success factors required to implement the preferred option
and the expected benefits.
2.2 MODEL OF CARE COMPONENTS
The model of care in line with ISCP Finance and Estates Reference Group financial principles recommended the following configuration of beds within the model:
Hot Site(s):
Up to 30 hyper-acute and acute Neuro-Rehabilitation beds on the hot site.
In addition, up to 10 beds for the management of patients with tracheostomy and/or PDoC
in accordance with the co-dependency framework (as an alternative to beds in the
independent sector).
Cold site(s):
A total of 60 beds for post-acute Neuro-Rehabilitation (27 fewer beds than the current
model) with the potential to reduce bed numbers further over time.
A slow stream unit (circa 20 beds) within GM to ensure care is provided closer to the patient’s
home.
This configuration would be supported further by:
o Community Neuro-Rehabilitation services in every locality area providing patients with
a consistent service offer, regardless of postcode; and
o Consistent oversight, commissioning and review of all patients in ad hoc placements in
the independent sector.
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Table 3 Model of care components
2.3 MODEL OF CARE: OPTIONS APPRAISAL
A high-level options appraisal was undertaken using information collected from the case for change and model of care by both the Neuro-Rehab Programme Group and Neuro-Rehab Patient and Carer Group against the following categories:
Quality of Care
Access to Care
Patient and Carer Experience
Value for Money
Deliverability
Strategic Fit
Following appraisal the following options were preferred:
PDOC/Tracheostomy provided at Salford Royal site
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5 Slow-Stream PDOC/Tracheostomy beds at Floyd Unit
10 Slow-Stream Physical beds at Floyd Unit
5 Slow-Stream Behavioural/Cognitive at Devonshire Unit
15 Post-Acute Beds at Devonshire Unit
5 Post-Acute Beds at Floyd Unit (not challenging behaviour)
40 Post-Acute Beds at Trafford
In developing the business case the recommended single provider Salford Royal Foundation Trust
(SRFT) used this high-level options appraisal information to develop and evaluate 3 options based on
the previous work. These were:
1. Do nothing
2. Adopt the GM model of care minus provision for PDOC/Tracheostomy patients
3. Adopt the full GM model of care
These were appraised as outlined below:
Options
Description
Main Advantages Main Disadvantages
Option 1: Do
nothing -
continue as
current
No change of employer for staff currently working in the service
No improvement to patient flow resulting in continued acute bed blocking
The Trust would not access the increased Tariffs if it did nothing
People would continue to not have the right care, in the right place, at the right time and hence their outcomes would not improve
Savings from improving patient flow will not be realised
The service will continue to not be able to provide the intensity of therapy that patients need and length of stay will therefore not be reduced
There would continue to be inequity of service provision across GM
People would continue to receive slow-stream rehabilitation in the independent
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sector, accessed through ad hoc commissioning arrangements and often out of area
Commissioners would continue to contract with multiple independent sector providers within and out-with GM thereby not realising potential savings that could be gained through a joint, coordinated commissioning of services across GM
Commissioners would have to continue to case manage individual placements across multiple providers both within and out-with GM
Care across the whole pathway will not be standardised and managed through a single pathway and hence standards will continue to be variable
Option 2:
Partly adopt
the GM
Neuro-
Rehabilitation
Model of
Care,
excluding the
PDoC/
Tracheostomy
One-off cost to create 10 PDoC/Tracheostomy beds/ward would be saved
Would not have to invest funds/time/ resources to train more staff to manage PDoC/Tracheostomy patients
Improved patient flow for all patients except PDoC/Tracheostomy
Costs associated with delayed discharges will reduce for all inpatient neuro-rehab beds with the exception of PDoC/Tracheostomy
Improved standardisation and consistency of the GM inpatient Neuro-Rehabilitation services, with the exception of post-acute PDoC/Tracheostomy
Continued bed blocking relating patients with PDoC and/or Tracheostomy, impacting upstream services e.g. neurosurgery
Single provider would not be delivering on the model of care i.e. being the provider for all of the inpatient neuro-rehab beds in the model of care, as the post-acute pdoc/tracheostomy patients would still have to be referred to independent sector
Experience of PDoC/Tracheostomy patients and their families does not improve (have to wait long time to access acute services and independent sector for post-acute)
Option 3:
Adopt the full
GM Neuro-
Rehabilitation
Model of Care
Circa 20 new beds for patients requiring slow stream Neuro-Rehabilitation, creating new beds closer to home for the benefits of patients
Up to 10 new beds for the management of patients with tracheostomy and/or PDoC on the hot site (to provide improved patient choice of care, closer to home)
Post-acute site/s delivering up to a total of 60 beds (27 fewer beds than current
Success of the new model is dependent on the consistent provision of community Neuro-Rehabilitation services in every locality
Additional bed capacity will need to be identified to accommodate the PDoc/Tracheostomy patients
Estate costs
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model) with the potential to reduce bed numbers further over time
Improved patient flow, resulting in reduced LOS and improved patient experience
Workforce resilience
Improved consistency and standardisation of the whole of the Neuro-Rehabilitation inpatient service
The agreed GM model of care would be fully implemented
Implementing the GM model of care would attract higher bed day tariffs for every level of the service, thereby enabling the service to meet national staffing levels.
Table 4 Options Appraisal
2.4 PREFERRED OPTION
The preferred option as modelled within the financial case is option 3, adopt the full GM model of
care. Adopting the full model would help reduce variation that currently exists across service and
support improving patient flow, reducing length of stay and overall improving patient experience.
2.5 CRITICAL SUCCESS FACTORS
In order for the Model of Care to be implemented successfully there are a number of critical success factors that need to be addressed: Community Neuro-Rehabilitation as the key ‘enabling’ component in the Model of Care
For the inpatient services to be able to reduce the number of post-acute beds, there must be
Community Neuro-Rehabilitation services in every area of GM. Community Neuro-Rehabilitation
services are critical to the success of the Model of Care, as well as future proofing the service.
Without this provision, beds cannot be closed and the service will not achieve right care, right time
and right place. The challenge associated with regards to community services is the level of
investment required by some CCGs – primarily those CCGs with no service currently or with a very
low staffing base. However, the only alternative to investing in community services is further
investment and commissioning of bed based services in both the NHS and independent sector.
Governance
To ensure a whole-system approach and an effective single Model of Care for Neuro-Rehabilitation,
it is essential that there is a shared governance framework across the acute and community sectors.
The governance framework will ensure robust clinical governance, effective coordination of services
and communication and will foster collaboration and innovation.
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Audit of existing patients in the independent sector
GM CCGs have recently agreed to allow clinical ODN leads to review all patients currently in the
independent sector. This will enable an accurate assessment and care plan review for each of these
patients and will enable validation of the current bed number estimates for slow stream and
PDoC/tracheostomy patients.
Developing a greater understanding of the needs of people currently placed within independent
sector slow-stream rehabilitation placements is critical to more accurately describing the future
service requirements for slow stream rehabilitation.
Engagement with Neighbouring Localities
Further engagement about the developing Model of Care is required with neighbouring
commissioners to GM; this is particularly relevant for North Derbyshire and Eastern Cheshire
populations who routinely access GM Neuro-Rehabilitation inpatient services.
2.6 COSTS
The financial case (section 3) gives a detailed appraisal of financial modelling and cost from both a
commissioner and provider perspective.
2.7 RISKS
The key risks to implement the model of care are outlined in the table below:
No Risk Impact
1 Transformation of community
Neuro-Rehabilitation services is
not complete in time for
implementation
Full benefits of model cannot be realised. Patients within
an acute setting but fit for discharge into community
care remain in an acute setting where community
services are not established.
2 Availability of workforce to
recruit to new posts
New model cannot be implemented and service does
have staff to meet requirements or service specification.
Single provider incurs agency costs to fill posts
3 Future intentions of use of
estate
Organisations owning estate where the service will be
delivered from may decide to change the use of that
estate or give up estate therefore impacting the service
to deliver across GM
4 Timescale to implementation Timescales to implement may incur additional
transformational costs that are not available therefore
impacting implementation
Table 5 Key Risks
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The identification and management of risks is further detailed in the management case (section 5.8)
2. 8 BENEFITS
The key benefits outlined in the model of care are illustrated below:
Figure 3 Key Benefits of the Model of Care
The anticipated financial benefits can be quantified as below:
Benefit Impact Financial Benefit
Reduced length of stay
Increased flow through the service, less requirement of acute sector beds
Patients treated in the right place at the right time
Improved patient experience
Reduced Cost per patient episode
Improvement in flow management
Reduction in length of stay. Improved patient experience, access to MDT
Timely access to Rehabilitation
Improved patient outcomes
Reduced cost per patient episode
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Improved patient experience
Effective outpatient service
Less outpatient appointments, reduction in waiting list, access to therapies
Reduction in outpatient costs
Management of referrals in independent sector
Less reliance on independent sector, reduction of IS beds and cost
Reduction in length of stay in IS beds when patients do access those services
Improved review for patients within IS beds
Reduction in IS spend across GM
Workforce meeting national standards
Greater intensity of rehabilitation
Access for patients to a full MDT
Reduced length of stay
Improved staff morale and staff retention
Improved data reporting
Improved continuity of care
Improved discharge planning
Improved service resilience
Reduced cost per patient episode
Reduction in agency costs
Improved service quality and consistency
Improved patient outcomes
Improved patient experience
Reduction in service variation
Reduced cost per patient episode
Table 6 Benefits, Impacts and Financial Benefits
2.9 SENSITIVITY ANALYSIS
A full sensitivity analysis is outlined in section 3.3 of the financial case.
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3. FINANCIAL CASE
3.1 INTRODUCTION
This section details the overall financial case of the Greater Manchester Neuro Rehabilitation Acute
redesign including commissioner financial modelling, sensitivity analysis, provider financial
monitoring as well as any non-recurrent transitional costs and capital costs. The financial modelling
assumes that each CCG in Greater Manchester commissions community Neuro Rehabilitation and
Stroke services in line with the agreed Greater Manchester specifications for these services. The
financial modelling does not include the locally determined financial investments in community
services to ensure that services are commissioned in line with these specifications.
3.2 FINANCIAL MODELLING FOR COMMISSIONERS
3.2.1 Estimated Current Spend
The estimated total spend for commissioners for the current acute inpatient neuro rehabilitation
pathway in Greater Manchester is £25.0m based on 2019/20 local tariffs as show in table 7. The
total bed base currently is 154, made up of 117 NHS beds and 37 independent sector beds.
Table 7 Estimated GM Neuro Rehab Acute Inpatient Spend 2019/20 for Commissioners
i) After the closure of the Taylor Unit in Wigan, Manchester Foundation Trust (MFT) was
commissioned by Bolton and Wigan to mobilise 20 beds, however only 10 additional beds have
been opened. For the purpose of this cost impact we have assumed that the 20 additional beds are
operational, 50 in total.
ii) This is based on the 2019/20 contract prices in each contract.
iii) Independent sector spend is assumed the same as 2018/19.
iv) PDOC/Tracheostomy beds are an estimate of inappropriate excess bed days.
Unit Level Number
of Beds Price
Maximum
Number of
Bed Days in
Year
Occupancy
Estimated
Spend Based
on Occupancy
(£)
C2 (SRFT) 1a 20 505£ 7,300 100% 3,668,739£
B4 (SRFT) 1b 10 609£ 3,650 95% 2,117,020£
Sub Total NHSE Commissioned 30 10,950 5,785,759£
Complex Discharge Team 349,500£
PDOC / Trachy Beds 250£ 913 228,125£
Floyd Unit (Rochdale) 2b 18 441£ 6,570 90.0% 2,608,298£
Devonshire (Stockport) 2b 19 421£ 6,935 96.5% 2,820,335£